Mark Morris, known for his attention to music, has, for this occasion, joined forces with The Silk Road Ensemble and various storytellers and singers, to bring us the ancient Azerbaijani story of “Layla and Majnun.”

The history of the story is long and complex. It has been told in Persian by Nezami Ganjawi, (1140-1209 CE). It is through his authorship that this mystical and tragic love story is best known. There are many versions: it has been told throughout Arabia, Turkey, India and beyond.

Morris, with the recommendation of Yo-yo Ma, has collaborated with the musicians and singers to bring “Layla and Majnun” to UC Berkeley's Zellerbach Hall as a dance event, September 30 - October 2. Yetthe musicians and singers held center stage while the dancers filled the surrounding space, ramps and risers, with a series of walking pageants and occasional duets.As the story progressed, the unrequited meetings and partings of the fateful couple were illustrated in the dance.

Set against a huge color abstract backdrop by Howard Hodgins, the dancers, in costumes by the same artist, moved in smooth processions around the singers. There were few changes in dynamics, except for occasional jumps.Couples met, touched hands, embraced and parted, illustrating the inevitable separation and doom the characters faced.

Domingo Estrada, Jr. and Nicole Sabella in their duet, were most expressive of the lovers’ plight through balances, tilts, efforts at embrace and elongated separation.

The Mark Morris Dance Group is composed of very skilled performers who accomplished the presentation of the dramatic forces in the text and music. The usual balletic-modern dance vocabulary characteristic of Morris’ work, was exchanged for more modest expressions of balances, falls and postures to illustrate the text and the quality of the singing. It was another dimension of Morris’ fascination with cross-cultural material.